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Show ' ' f W W K ' s Till: IIKAI'T OK THIC t'OVKNANT K As President Wilson declared in his address at Hi Rait Lake City, Arllclo ten of the League is the very H' "heurt of the covenant," and in tho coming campaign m v ' . It is the main issue. The question Is shall tho con- B Htltutlon of tho United States bo cast asldo and the jl . i famous article tun bo substituted therefor. With the B2 ' U United States In the League listen for a moment to B " Senator Harding in Article ten. B "Suppose that under the military alliance and BBBb H V.. ' tho super-authority of Article X, a program of armed BBBm B 4 forco Is agreed upon, and the Congress of the United BBBb H f States declines to rvspond. The executive would be BBBB " i' B ' railed upon to carry on a wir without constitutional B aiithnttty, or we should provo our compact no more B than a scrap of paper, We nro on thu side nf both B htfety and honor to hold for ourselves the decision H ( ,, " of our obligation to the world. We hnvn ever played Hi n becoming part In hum mi progress; we will not full B ' t to play it In that fitedom of conscience and action B v'' which liefllH u confident republic. Men prnto about Bl iVO lolatod olillcallons to the nntlnns of tho earth. Tho H 1 iy Holemn (ruth Is that our part in tho world war was an obligation to ourselves, performed In sympathy with associated, not allied, powers, and our splendid part lii helping to win the war was the. armed manifestation manifesta-tion of American conscience, aot tbe fulfillment of a written obligation." Perfectly plain, is it not? Even so much so that President Wilton was repudiated at tbe poll two years ago and to plain now that Ooveraor Cox will Met bis In November. . ,' j |